Shanghai Daily

China refutes Trump’s fentanyl comments

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CHINA yesterday denied it was to blame for fentanyl deaths in the United States after President Donald Trump accused Beijing of reneging on its promise to crack down on the opioid.

US authoritie­s have accused China of being the main source of the potent drug, which caused 32,000 overdose deaths in the United States last year alone.

Fentanyl sellers have used parcel services to send the drug to the United States, and China had also vowed to step up customs checks. But Trump wrote on Twitter last month that while China had pledged to stop exports of fentanyl, “this never happened, and many Americans continue to die!”

But a senior official of the China National Narcotic Control Commission said yesterday that there have been no cases of producing, selling or traffickin­g fentanyl reported in China since May 1 when China started class scheduling of all fentanyl-like substances.

“What President Trump concluded on Twitter is groundless,” Liu Yuejin, deputy director of the commission and an official with the Ministry of Public Security, said.

The drug enforcemen­t agencies of China and the United States have maintained sound cooperatio­n over the years, which seldom involved fentanyl-related case investigat­ions, Liu said.

The Chinese side has reported 383 pieces of informatio­n of fentanyl-related parcels to US drug enforcemen­t agencies since 2012, while the US side reported only six clues related to fentanyl traffickin­g to China during the period, he said.

“Strict drug control is China’s consistent position,” Liu said, adding that China is ready to deepen cooperatio­n with other countries, including the United States, to exchange informatio­n, share clues and launch joint investigat­ions.

China has launched thorough investigat­ions into bio-medical bases and chemical industrial parks across the country to rule out possible illegal production of fentanyl-related substances, clear out fentanyl sales and purchase informatio­n online and strengthen control over legal fentanyl products since May. China’s National Narcotics Laboratory has spent nearly 6 million yuan (US$846,450) on research including fentanyl-related substance testing, and at least 616 million yuan will be invested to develop five subordinat­e narcotic laboratori­es across the country.

The country has also been working on several legal documents for conviction and sentencing in fentanyl-related cases.

(Agencies)

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